Gulliver’s Travels
go abroad with their usual ease and satisfaction. However,
about ten days before their death, which they seldom fail in
computing, they return the visits that have been made them
by those who are nearest in the neighbourhood, being car-
ried in a convenient sledge drawn by Yahoos; which vehicle
they use, not only upon this occasion, but when they grow
old, upon long journeys, or when they are lamed by any ac-
cident: and therefore when the dying Houyhnhnms return
those visits, they take a solemn leave of their friends, as if
they were going to some remote part of the country, where
they designed to pass the rest of their lives.
I know not whether it may be worth observing, that the
Houyhnhnms have no word in their language to express
any thing that is evil, except what they borrow from the de-
formities or ill qualities of the Yahoos. Thus they denote the
folly of a servant, an omission of a child, a stone that cuts
their feet, a continuance of foul or unseasonable weather,
and the like, by adding to each the epithet of Yahoo. For in-
stance, hhnm Yahoo; whnaholm Yahoo, ynlhmndwihlma
Yahoo, and an ill-contrived house ynholmhnmrohlnw Ya-
hoo.
I could, with great pleasure, enlarge further upon the
manners and virtues of this excellent people; but intending
in a short time to publish a volume by itself, expressly upon
that subject, I refer the reader thither; and, in the mean
time, proceed to relate my own sad catastrophe.